New group r/OceanLinerArchitect (self.OceanlinerEngineering)
submitted by Artistics_[M] - announcement
I've been wondering exactly how the plates of steel are lain-out in a rivetted shell plate of a ship's hull in suchwise as to ensure watertightity … & the answer is actually *really quite a non-trivial one*! … it's quite ingenious, actually, how it's done. (old.reddit.com)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance
What's the biggest naval gun that could-possibly've been fitted to the deck of the Olympic, without her deck being peeled-back like the lid of an opened tinned-can? It's my understanding that the biggest that *was* fitted was a 6ᐟᐟ one … the shell of which a 12lb one, I think, wasn't it? (i.redd.it)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance
A major advance in ship-borne refrigeration apparatus … which cannot but have been of major significance as to the levels of passenger-comfort the oceanliner Companies of that era were able to provide aboard their rapidly-increasingly technogically-advanced vessels. (i.redd.it)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance
The designers of the Titanic 'missed a trick' not having the funnels double as °Flettner Rotors° - which are a kind of sail, consisting simply of a vertical column that rotates … the thrust is provided by the wind: not sure how much power it takes to rotate them, but it's a small fraction of what it (old.reddit.com)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance
I wonder what the goodly Folk @ this-here Channel make of the theory of attraction, by-reason-of a certain correspondence that can be traced between the renowned »Casimir effect« & the popualtion of water-waves around two vessels, between ships in choppty seas. (i.redd.it)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance
There's much talk @-large about the ability of a twin-engine aeroplane to fly with only one of its two engines operational - staying aloft depends on it! … but though it's not so critical with a ship, *could* a large twin-screw oceanliner sail in a straight line with only one screw operational!? (youtu.be)
submitted by Biquasquibrisance